Tuesday, 10 October 2023

SERMON 191 - SUNDAY 8 OCTOBER 2023 - TRINITY 18

Sermon at All Saints’ Church, Winterslow and All Saints’ Church Farley - Sunday 8 October 2023

Isaiah 5:1-7; Philippians 3:4b-14; Matthew 21:33-46

Father God, we bless and praise you and your Son, Jesus Christ, remembering that He is the vine and we just his branches, and you are the owner of the vineyard from which all good things come. We pray that we shall bear the fruits of your creation and protection in all we do, say and think. Amen

I love stories, parables and illustrations about wine and vineyards. I like drinking it too – especially a nice Argentinian Malbec or French Claret! When you think about it, the bible, in both the Old and New Testaments, is full of stories connected with wine.  The first act Noah did after leaving the Ark was to plant a vineyard and subsequently got himself drunk and disgraced himself; we then have Pharaoh’s cup-bearer (his wine servant) in prison with Joseph whose later testimony helped release Joseph; the Book of Proverbs has much to say about the beverage including the dangers of over-indulging;  Isaiah writes a song about a vineyard which we heard read out this morning and which I’ll come back to shortly; then there is the miracle of water being turned into wine at the wedding at Canaan – Jesus’s first miracle; Jesus appears to have enjoyed a good party and drank wine with sinners and tax collectors; there are also Jesus’s two examples of the vineyard representing modern day Israel which we will look at more closely shortly and, of course, the serving of wine and its symbolism at the Last Supper.  In fact there are so many references to wine and drinking in the bible I am amazed the Temperance Society was ever taken seriously!

Of course, wine was very important back in those days in the Middle-East because it was a way of drinking purified water in a hot country and it would usually accompany most meals. It was also important to the Jews because they had been commanded in the Books of Numbers (15:5) and Nehemiah (13:12) to make drink offerings and tithes of wine to Yahweh (Jehovah).

Jesus having been brought up in this Jewish culture would have seen many vineyards in his time and observed the process of viniculture and wine making. This is why he used the illustration of the vine and its branches to describe himself and those who followed him. However, before looking more closely at the gospel reading let’s look back at what is being said in our first reading today from Isaiah remembering that Isaiah was one of those major prophets who foretold the coming of Jesus.

Isaiah is writing at the time of the Exile of the Jews in Babylon, those seventy years when the cream of Judah’s society had been sent to Babylon to serve their oppressors. The Temple built by King Solomon had been destroyed by these invaders and the rump of the population had been left in Judah to maintain the fields in forced labour. Isaiah looks back and laments at what had happened, likening Judah to a fertile vineyard planted by God who expected the people to bear fruit and obey his commands.  What he sees is a nation in ruins brought about by their own failure to flourish because they didn’t act as God had wished.  He describes the people as wild sour grapes, not the cultivated sweet grapes which he had planted and expected to grow. They were expected to behave with justice and righteousness but instead they were divided and warred amongst themselves – the reference here to bloodshed and not righteousness. Because of this, God had torn it down, dug it up and destroyed it – a reference to the Babylonian destruction of the Temple and removal of the people into Exile. It’s God’s judgment on the people – a warning also for the future never again to allow this to happen.

Paul takes up the theme of obedience to God but in the letter he writes to the Philippians he looks back upon his own upbringing and behaviour as an ardent law abiding Jew and reminds us that following the coming of Christ, things have changed. No longer are we just expected to follow the law to be righteous but it is also necessary to follow the ways and teachings of Jesus;  that we must now see everything that had gone on before through the lens of the Cross. Paul acknowledges that he has persecuted the followers of Jesus for not following the old law precisely but now realises that whatever he thought he had gained by strict adherence to the laws was worth nothing to the gain he has made by the knowledge of Jesus as his Saviour and the Saviour of the world (both Jew and Gentile).

Jesus, in the parable which he tells in our gospel reading, reflects back on Isaiah’s vineyard, but the story differs in quite a material way. Again, the vineyard represents Judah or by now, under Roman rule, called Judaea.  This time the landowner who planted the vineyard left it to be tended by tenants on his behalf but when his agents came to collect the produce the tenants killed the agents.  This happened twice and then the landowner sent his own son thinking that there was no way in which the tenants would harm him – but they treated him in the same way as the agents and killed him too.

Jesus then asks the chief priests and elders, to whom he is directing this story, what they think the landowner will do next? To which they reply that they believe the landowner would throw out the present tenants and put new ones in their place.  Jesus then explains that he is talking about them – that they will be thrown out and replaced.  He is actually foretelling the coming of the Roman general Titus and the destruction of the Second Temple but not until after his own death, the death of the son of the landowner – Jesus the Son of God.

As often with Jesus, he ends his explanation with a bit of a riddle. He talks about the stone which the builder rejects becoming the cornerstone.  As I am sure many of you will know, the cornerstone is always laid in the northeast corner of a building and is the one which is first laid. The rest of the dimensions of the building follow on. Here Jesus is alluding to himself as being the stone which they, the chief priests and elders, will reject. He will then become the cornerstone of a new covenant – a new religious order – Christianity – a following of him, Jesus Christ, and his teachings. Tom Wright, in his book “Twelve Months of Sundays” explains that it is also a play on words as the Hebrew word for “son” is “ben” and the Hebrew word for “stone” is “eben” hence “corner stone” or “corner son”.

So, what relevance do these passages have for us today other than their historical significance? 

It reminds us of three fundamental things:

First, God, as the owner and planter of the vineyard, is the creator and owner of all things and that we owe our very existence to Him, and that having created us in his own image, we are expected to grow and lead righteous lives.  If we do that, and respect and acknowledge that all humankind is created in his image, the world will be like the Kingdom of Heaven– something which we should all aspire to.

Secondly, that it is not sufficient just to live by the law – not just be good and obey laws and be diligent in our religious rituals – we also need to know and accept that Jesus, the vineyard owner’s son, is our true saviour and, as Paul put it, everything else is of little or no value above the knowledge and acceptance of Jesus as the Son of God and Saviour of the World, and

Thirdly and finally, if we accept those two things, God will protect us and guide us – he will maintain those vineyard walls and hedges and watchtowers looking out for us and keeping us safe so that we may grow and flourish and become those rich fine cultivated grapes from which the finest of all wines is made. 

As we started so let us finish with that same prayer :

Father God, we bless and praise you and your Son, Jesus Christ, remembering that He is the vine and we just his branches, and you are the owner of the vineyard from which all good things come. We pray that we shall bear the fruits of your creation and protection in all we do, say and think.

Amen

 

MFB/191/04102023

 

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